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Spiking calls not just city problem
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, February 15, 2017

The statistics are in. Numbers from 2016 show just how much slack the city's first responders are picking up, largely due to a change in the way RCMP handles calls for intoxicated people downtown.

While the RCMP has reported a decline in calls for service by 13.6 per cent, the city's fire services saw calls spike nine per cent. Much of these calls are medical, and Dennis Marchiori, the city's director of public safety, has drawn a link between this data and the RCMP's change in policy to not respond to calls for intoxicated people downtown.

In the summer, Marchiori told Yellowknifer he believes people have started calling the city's fire and ambulance services instead of the RCMP to report intoxicated people, a trend that he believes contributes to the rising numbers.

This is obviously a problem. According to Marchiori, the more time the city's first responders spend on these calls, the less time they have for other things, such as training and maintenance. As we know, the territorial government's Department of Justice contracts police work to the RCMP. Yellowknifer has previously called on the department to pressure the RCMP start responding to calls for intoxicated people again. Nothing seems to have been done on this issue yet but council has at least one card in its deck to negotiate improvement.

During council's budget debate in December, Coun. Shauna Morgan brought up the fact the city has the power to increase the amount of money it charges the GNWT for ambulances to deal with medevac patient transfers. She put forth a motion to increase that charge to $1,100 from $445. While council decided to defer this vote, Yellowknifer remembers it's still a possibility and suggests it could be used to leverage movement from a territorial government that can be obstinate in its inertia.

Yellowknifer encourages council to also keep this in mind - remember the Department of Justice has the power to negotiate its contract with the RCMP. If the territorial government won't encourage the police to start responding to calls about public intoxication, perhaps it can just pay more for the privilege of using the city's already over-worked emergency services.


Reporter shows how to stand up to bully
Yellowknifer - Wednesday, February 15, 2017

Yellowknifer business reporter Jessica Davey-Quantick has demonstrated for us all how to stand up to cyberbullies.

Last month, after bringing the house down with a brilliant Brrrlesque tap-dance routine at the Top Knight, she posted photos on Instagram to commemorate the experience.

Meanwhile, a 15-year-old teen in London, England ran across her photos and, as teens are want to do, left a mean comment about her body. Then, the teen took it upon himself to go through an entire year's worth of posts suggesting she commit suicide, among other hateful things.

A little bit of Internet research later, Davey-Quantick was in possession of this child's identity and contact information for his parents. So, she told on him.

When his parents decided to get defensive instead of reprimand the child, she contacted his school. This led to a suspension and the confiscation of his phone.

Davey-Quantick works in media and can write eloquently about her experiences, so she decided to get her story out there so other youth who receive abuse like this know they don't have to take it. It's a positive message that each and every person who reads her story can take to heart.

Most avid social media users will at one time or another encounter a random mean-spirited cyberbully.

So it's important to remember the person on the other side of the screen is probably just a pimply punk, and there is nothing wrong with telling that punk's parents what he or she is up to online.


A unique relationship in helping out
Editorial Comment by Darrell Greer
Kivalliq News - Wednesday, February 15, 2017

While a hockey program may have been the latest to cast a shining spotlight on just how generous folks in the Kivalliq tend to be, especially when it benefits children and youth, that generosity reaches far beyond the hockey community.

The people of all seven Kivalliq communities are well-known for their generosity in supporting everything from registered charities, to sports teams, student travel, gently-used clothing operations, food banks, and annual Christmas food hamper and toy drives across the region.

Yes, it was pretty incredibly to see how much the local Rankin atoms program was able to fundraise towards travel costs during the recent Arctic Atoms championship in Rankin, but, even so, it really shouldn't surprise anyone all that much.

This is what the people of the Kivalliq do. They rise to the occasion and support those teams, organizations, students, and community programs that need a helping hand. And here is one of the wonderful elements of the relationship in all of this. Those doing the helping do not blindly throw their money at any person, group, team or entity that is doing nothing to help themselves. But to those working hard to achieve their goals, the people of this region give whatever they can afford and, when you're trying to raise funds to cover travel outside of the North, every donation is cheerfully accepted.

Likewise, those seeking help in achieving their goals don't take the region's generosity for granted by simply assuming they'll reach their target by putting the word out, sitting back, and waiting for the money to roll in. Those who take that approach rarely get off the couch, let alone out of the North.

We saw a wondrous show of community support in Chesterfield Inlet this past December, when an RCMP officer and her partner were able to give special a Christmas gift to every child in town, in addition to the warmly received food baskets they and their helpers delivered around the community.

People in the Kivalliq are really a fun-loving bunch at heart, and everyone on both sides of this unique relationship is someone's relative, friend or neighbour.

In other words, they usually have an awful lot in common. That opens the door to numerous fundraising events that allow those helping out to do so while enjoying a few laughs along the way, or, maybe, even winning a few bucks in a Texas hold 'em poker tournament, or a 50-50 draw for that matter.

The people of the Kivalliq are notorious bargain hunters, too, leading to the popularity of using events like flea markets to raise funds. Picking up a little bargain item while helping out a worthy cause is actually pretty cool, when you come right down to it.

And, if you're wondering if the notorious Kivalliq sweet tooth also plays a role in all of this, check out the next bake sale that's held in your community.

We all know the king of fundraisers in our region is bingo, and those who are awarded a slot by the hamlet usually stand to take care of a good chunk of their monetary goals in one or two nights.

But bingo doesn't make our list of friendly fundraisers or gracious donors, because it's a totally different mindset that just doesn't lend itself to a sense of community. Despite the fact a worthwhile cause almost always benefits from bingo nights, the game takes too much money out of the pockets of those in the community who can least afford it and it's driven by the desire to profit, not to support or aid.

But, leaving bingo out of the mix, the fact remains people in the Kivalliq are a generous bunch and the region truly does have a most unique relationship when it comes to helping each other out.


Cut post-secondary programs hurt North
Northwest Territories/News North - Monday, February 13, 2017

Aurora College's social work diploma and bachelor of education programs are gone. Victims of government cutbacks.

The college is also set to raise tuition incrementally over the next two years but will still remain below the $2,400 in financial assistance students receive.

The college is facing a $1.89-million cut with the announcement of the 2017-18 territorial budget last week.

While we generally encourage the GNWT to find efficiencies wherever possible - we certainly can't dig the debt much deeper - reducing post-secondary education opportunities in the NWT is just plain wrong.

Especially in the in-demand social work and education fields. And particularly when the students are from the North and will likely stick around here once they graduate.

An Aurora College social work student who will be one of the last to graduate with the diploma says the cancellation of her program is "shocking."

Shelby Clarke articulated the situation in an interview with News/North after the surprise announcement from the college Feb. 2.

"They're in desperate need of social workers and cutting a program that actually helps people become social workers doesn't really make sense to me," said the 22-year-old Clarke. "And I think bringing counsellors and social workers from down south up here to deal with Northern problems isn't going to work.

"It's important to have people understand the different situations that you're going to be dealing with up here in the Northern communities. If you're bringing people who have no idea, they could really affect it in a bad way if they don't understand what's going on."

If students such as Clarke understand the situation so clearly, why does it appear our elected officials have blinders on?

As the news was just sinking in with tearful students at Aurora campuses in Fort Smith and Yellowknife - where the education and social worker programs are delivered, respectively - MLA Kieron Testart (Kam Lake) questioned Education Minister Alfred Moses in the legislative assembly.

Testart wondered why Aurora College's funding was cut and the two programs nixed before the school's strategic plan has been developed this year?

Moses cited low enrolment and graduation rates, and said Aurora College has the autonomy to make its own decisions. However, it's easy to understand that once the programs are cut, then they have no chance to grow at all.

But then he delivered this bombshell: he encouraged students who want to continue similar studies to do so somewhere else.

The government offers "a great student financial assistance program" and will support any student who wants to get a similar degree from a southern institution, Moses said.

Once they leave, we may never see them again after they've paid off their remissible loans. Well, maybe at Christmas.

Educating Northern students in the North is the best way to ensure they stay in the North and not follow the brain drain south. The latest Statistics Canada figures for the NWT show smaller communities continue to struggle with population loss.

We strongly urge the GNWT to work with Aurora College to reverse this awful decision.

And we really hope Education Minister Moses doesn't truly believe the best solution for educating our youth is to send them away.


Jail needs more than a makeover
Nunavut/News North - Monday, February 13, 2017

The territorial and federal governments are finally investing needed funds - $75.8 million - to renovate Baffin Correctional Centre.

The end result will be the death of BCC, and the birth of the Qikiqtani Correctional Healing Centre. But will this be an actual rebirth or simply a rebrand? Knowing the history of the place, Nunavummiut will be crossing their fingers that the new facility lives up to its promise.

Even a hefty financial investment will make difficult work of repairing its reputation within the community.

The media is rarely welcomed into such facilities, so we have had to rely on images of BCC supplied by investigators to get an insider's view of the conditions there. We've seen the images of mattresses on the floors of BCC's gymnasium and cells. We've heard that capacity in individual cells was often doubled, tripled or quadrupled depending on the day. With 57 people at one point sharing two showers, two toilets and three urinals, it's not a stretch to describe living there as a struggle to survive.

Premier Peter Taptuna was warned in 2015 to expect lawsuits over the constitutionality of housing people in such conditions.

The neighbouring Makigiarvik minimum security facility is a luxury hotel in comparison to the current jail. It started housing inmates ahead of its scheduled opening in 2015 because mould was causing a health crisis at BCC.

People will also need to wait and see whether living conditions improve considering the suggestion Nunavummiut will be returned from southern facilities to be held at the new Qikiqtani Correctional Healing Centre. It wouldn't be a surprise if the centre hits capacity immediately upon opening in 2020.

The investment is only a piece of the justice puzzle. With the courts facing shortages of space and judges, delays are allowing serious cases to be thrown out due to rules that require an accused to face justice in a reasonable time. The correctional system is thus feeling the pressure.

If the space and staffing levels can't keep up, it will be hard to see any healing take place. The situation echoes Nunavut's housing crisis: it's hard to focus on progress when everyone is in survival mode.

There needs to be real effort and change, not only at the correctional centre, although there is plenty of work to be done there. The government now has to find the people - mental health and addictions professionals and so on - to keep this ball rolling.

If the renaming doesn't translate into helping inmates heal, the name will simply be fresh lipstick on a pricey pig.


Spot device: get it, use it
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, February 10, 2017

Northerners, as group, are a fairly resourceful bunch when out on the land. They have to be to enjoy the outdoors in freezing temperatures and harsh weather.

That said, people can count on their survival skills for only so much when in a jam and cannot call for help.

Last week bore witness to the tragic death of Antoine Betsidea, a 46-year-old father of eight from Behchoko, who perished after becoming separated from his hunting party near MacKay Lake, about 350 km northeast of Yellowknife. Despite a desperate search in blizzard conditions, his body was not found for three days.

It hasn't been confirmed whether Betsidia was carrying some sort of communication device when he went missing but he did not contact would-be rescuers.

Yellowknifer has been peppered with cautionary tales dating back several years about people out on the land without functioning communications equipment, such as a satellite phone or Spot device, that can send GPS co-ordinates to loved ones and police.

Last summer, a cabin owner nearly 100 km east of Yellowknife got turned around when he decided to walk after damaging his ATV on a trail. What followed was a stressful and exhausting 32-hour ordeal - for him and his family. He was saved after climbing a hill and finding just enough reception on his cellphone to call his daughter-in-law.

His ordeal might have been much shorter had he been carrying a Spot or satellite phone, which don't require towers to send transmissions. Having one of these devices (and spare batteries) is not enough; friends and family should know when and where you are venturing into the wilderness.

These devices are affordable. The GNWT and community governments should ensure some are available to be checked out and returned for those who can't buy them. It would be a lot cheaper than calling in search and rescue crews costing tens of thousands of dollars.

The northern wilderness is beautiful but unforgiving. Northerners should never be without a communications device, even if only for a few hours on a short hike from civilization.

Too often, that is the last mistake anybody makes.


Housing First intake tool needs refining
Weekend Yellowknifer - Friday, February 10, 2017

No system is perfect but it's best practice to plug the holes early before it starts showing cracks.

Housing First has been hailed as a proactive program that provides the city's homeless with a roof over the heads, even while dealing with severe mental health and addictions issues.

Other models focus on treatment, counselling and training ahead of housing but for many homeless in Yellowknife the immediate concern isn't a need for self-improvement but survival.

That's why it is important to get people off the streets first and deal with some of the health and addictions issues later. Unfortunately, as pointed out by the Yellowknife Women's Society, which runs Housing First, as well as SideDoor Youth Ministries, the vulnerability assessment tool used to prioritize placements for the program tends to favour older clientele over youth who haven't live long enough to experience chronic homelessness.

The assessment also requires candidates to be able to articulate information about themselves to complete the diagnosis - something Denise McKee, executive director of the NWT Disabilities Council, says is not always possible as some candidates are "so off the grid" they cannot communicate their problems.

The tool is helpful but needs to be refined to meet the needs of homeless people in the North. With a few tweaks it can be very useful in getting our society's most vulnerable to a safer situation.


A house divided
Deh Cho Drum - Thursday, February 9, 2016

The legislative assembly of the Northwest Territories has rarely been as divided as it is on the topic of the territorial budget.

Ministers returned to the house Jan. 31 professing the need for fiscal restraint on the heels of an all-cabinet trip to a mining conference in B.C.

That didn't jive well with regular MLAs, some of whom have already grilled cabinet on the expense. It was a rocky start to an assembly that seems to have only grown rockier.

Nahendeh MLA Shane Thompson and Deh Cho MLA Michael Nadli are united with regular MLAs against the proposed budget.

In a strongly worded budget address, Thompson cited the harmful nature of cabinet solidarity as a barrier to true consensus government.

The need for ministers to work together with regular members was an issue both Thompson and Nadli pointed to.

For Nadli, a sticking point was recent major investments such as the purchase of NTCL assets and the 2015 purchase of Cantung Mine.

Being told the government needs to focus on fiscal restraint doesn't sit well, it seems, when that same government turns around and announces surprise purchases of million-dollar assets.

As Nadli said, a lack of communication and transparency does not bode well for the relationship needed in order for a consensus government to work.

Thompson summed up the budget divide rather well: cabinet cuts are aimed at the eventual funding of "megaprojects" such as hydro expansions, all-weather roads and capital purchases.

The regular members, on the other hand, want strategic investments that meet the needs of constituents and can save the government money in the long run.

Thompson says regular MLAs had "limited success" in their negotiations with cabinet. Nadli says cabinet members aren't putting in a genuine effort to collaborate with MLAs.

From what we've heard from other MLAs so far, regular members generally seem to agree.

The reckoning we are seeing on the floor of the legislative assembly has been a long time coming.

For years, MLAs have criticized the government for not prioritizing the needs of the territory's many small communities.

Time after time, MLAs question cabinet members on a lack of communication and consultation.

Cabinet needs to take a hard look at its approach to consensus government. While that's happening, cabinet members should also take a look at their own spending and weigh that against the pressing needs of the rest of the territory.

Proper consultation takes into account the needs of everyone. And while cabinet members may have a tough job prioritizing social and fiscal needs against a bottom line that's not as high as anyone would like, that is in fact the job they signed up for.

Cabinet members clearly need to stop pretending to consult and instead need to actually listen to the other elected members of the assembly. They need to put words into actions and show regular MLAs they do indeed have the best interests of everyone at heart.


Life experience wanted, no training necessary
Inuvik Drum - Thursday, February 9, 2016

During our talk about the potential Beaufort Delta Detox Centre, one thing Joey Amos said that resonated with me is not all the staff should need to be certified with whatever the government requirements are these days.

Instead, some can be people who are from here and have overcome addiction themselves.

In my opinion, the best life skills coaches are the ones who have been where the client is and can empathize with them.

This struck true for me growing up in speech therapy. Why would I take the advice of a speech therapist who doesn't stutter? You might have read a book about it and know all the terms and can repeat the list of advice you were taught, but I don't think you have any idea.

Maybe that's teenage angst, but I think education is a far more complex topic than just attendance at formal institutions. Who knows more, the person who walked that path, or the person who read a book about walking that path?

I think there's a place in the world for all types of education, and what's appropriate varies wildly depending on which field we're talking about. I want my doctor to have gone to school, not just be someone who's had a lot of surgeries.

In recent years, the bubble of post-secondary education and credential requirements has more and more began to seem like a racket.

Almost every industry has become pay-for-entry, with the government mandating certain credentials are needed for certain job types and the only way to get them is to go to a government-mandated education centre.

The same market-strangling, and therefore price-increasing phenomenon is apparent all over society, notably in the taxi business, where Uber has now upset the apple cart.

Industries usually lobby for this, because current players are grandfathered in, it strangles the marketplace to new entrants and it puts up a barrier to competition, so prices can remain elevated.

Everyone wins, except the consumer.

This relationship is getting more and more stressed as knowledge decentralizes and formal institutions lose relevance in the modern world.

For some of these softer fields such as addictions counselling, I say forget the credentials.

I don't know if the castle guards would allow it, but in my opinion, someone from Inuvik who has overcome addiction is an infinitely better counsellor than some 25-year-old recent graduate from the south who knows all the book smarts but not a lick of what it's like being addicted in the North.

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